Sabtu, 24 Oktober 2015

Fogponics

Hasil gambar untuk Fogponics
Fogponics
Fogponics is an advanced form of aeroponics which uses water in a vaporised form to transfer nutrients and oxygen to enclosed suspended plant roots. Using the same general idea behind aeroponics except fogponics uses a 5-10 micron mist within the rooting chamber and as use for a foliar feeding mechanism.

Rotary
A rotary hydroponic garden is a style of commercial hydroponics created within a circular frame which rotates continuously during the entire growth cycle of whatever plant is being grown.

While system specifics vary, systems typically rotate once per hour, giving a plant 24 full turns within the circle each 24-hour period. Within the center of each rotary hydroponic garden is a high intensity grow light, designed to simulate sunlight, often with the assistance of a mechanized timer.

Each day, as the plants rotate, they are periodically watered with a hydroponic growth solution to provide all nutrients necessary for robust growth. Due to the plants continuous fight against gravity, plants typically mature much more quickly than when grown in soil or other traditional hydroponic growing systems. Due to the small foot print a rotary hydroponic system has, it allows for more plant material to be grown per sq foot of floor space than other traditional hydroponic systems.

Hasil gambar untuk Fogponics
Substrates
One of the most obvious decisions hydroponic farmers have to make is which medium they should use. Different media are appropriate for different growing techniques.

Expanded clay aggregate
Baked clay pellets, are suitable for hydroponic systems in which all nutrients are carefully controlled in water solution. The clay pellets are inert, pH neutral and do not contain any nutrient value.

The clay is formed into round pellets and fired in rotary kilns at 1,200 °C (2,190 °F). This causes the clay to expand, like popcorn, and become porous. It is light in weight, and does not compact over time. The shape of an individual pellet can be irregular or uniform depending on brand and manufacturing process. The manufacturers consider expanded clay to be an ecologically sustainable and re-usable growing medium because of its ability to be cleaned and sterilized, typically by washing in solutions of white vinegar, chlorine bleach, or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and rinsing completely.

Another view is that clay pebbles are best not re-used even when they are cleaned, due to root growth that may enter the medium. Breaking open a clay pebble after a crop has been grown will reveal this growth.


Aeroponics

Hasil gambar untuk aeroponic
Aeroponics
Aeroponics is a system wherein roots are continuously or discontinuously kept in an environment saturated with fine drops (a mist or aerosol) of nutrient solution. The method requires no substrate and entails growing plants with their roots suspended in a deep air or growth chamber with the roots periodically wetted with a fine mist of atomized nutrients. Excellent aeration is the main advantage of aeroponics.

Aeroponic techniques have proven to be commercially successful for propagation, seed germination, seed potato production, tomato production, leaf crops, and micro-greens. Since inventor Richard Stoner commercialized aeroponic technology in 1983, aeroponics has been implemented as an alternative to water intensive hydroponic systems worldwide. The limitation of hydroponics is the fact that 1 kg of water can only hold 8 mg of air, no matter whether aerators are utilized or not.

Another distinct advantage of aeroponics over hydroponics is that any species of plants can be grown in a true aeroponic system because the micro environment of an aeroponic can be finely controlled. The limitation of hydroponics is that only certain species of plants can survive for so long in water before they become waterlogged. The advantage of aeroponics is that suspended aeroponic plants receive 100% of the available oxygen and carbon dioxide to the roots zone, stems, and leaves thus accelerating biomass growth and reducing rooting times. NASA research has shown that aeroponically grown plants have an 80% increase in dry weight biomass (essential minerals) compared to hydroponically grown plants. Aeroponics used 65% less water than hydroponics. NASA also concluded that aeroponically grown plants requires ¼ the nutrient input compared to hydroponics. Unlike hydroponically grown plants, aeroponically grown plants will not suffer transplant shock when transplanted to soil, and offers growers the ability to reduce the spread of disease and pathogens. Aeroponics is also widely used in laboratory studies of plant physiology and plant pathology. Aeroponic techniques have been given special attention from NASA since a mist is easier to handle than a liquid in a zero-gravity environment.
 Hasil gambar untuk aeroponic
Passive sub-irrigation
Passive sub-irrigation, also known as passive hydroponics or semi-hydroponics, is a method wherein plants are grown in an inert porous medium that transports water and fertilizer to the roots by capillary action from a separate reservoir as necessary, reducing labor and providing a constant supply of water to the roots. In the simplest method, the pot sits in a shallow solution of fertilizer and water or on a capillary mat saturated with nutrient solution. The various hydroponic media available, such as expanded clay and coconut husk, contain more air space than more traditional potting mixes, delivering increased oxygen to the roots, which is important in epiphytic plants such as orchids and bromeliads, whose roots are exposed to the air in nature. Additional advantages of passive hydroponics are the reduction of root rot and the additional ambient humidity provided through evaporations.

Ebb and flow or flood and drain sub-irrigation
In its simplest form, there is a tray above a reservoir of nutrient solution. Either the tray is filled with growing medium (clay granules being the most common) and planted directly or pots of medium stand in the tray. At regular intervals, a simple timer causes a pump to fill the upper tray with nutrient solution, after which the solution drains back down into the reservoir. This keeps the medium regularly flushed with nutrients and air. Once the upper tray fills past the drain stop, it begins recirculating the water until the timer turns the pump off, and the water in the upper tray drains back into the reservoirs.

Run to waste
In a run-to-waste system, nutrient and water solution is periodically applied to the medium surface. This may be done in its simplest form, by manually applying a nutrient-and-water solution one or more times per day in a container of inert growing media, such as rockwool, perlite, vermiculite, coco fibre, or sand. In a slightly more complex system, it is automated with a delivery pump, a timer and irrigation tubing to deliver nutrient solution with a delivery frequency that is governed by the key parameters of plant size, plant growing stage, climate, substrate, and substrate conductivity, pH, and water content.

In a commercial setting, watering frequency is multi factorial and governed by computers or PLCs.

Commercial hydroponics production of large plants like tomatoes, cucumber, and peppers use one form or another of run-to-waste hydroponics.

In environmentally responsible uses, the nutrient rich waste is collected and processed through an on site filtration system to be used many times, making the system very productive.

The majority of bonsai are now grown in soil-free substrates (typically consisting of akadama, grit, diatomaceous earth and other inorganic components) and have their water and nutrients provided in a run-to-waste form.

Deep water culture
The hydroponic method of plant production by means of suspending the plant roots in a solution of nutrient-rich, oxygenated water. Traditional methods favor the use of plastic buckets and large containers with the plant contained in a net pot suspended from the centre of the lid and the roots suspended in the nutrient solution. The solution is oxygen saturated by an air pump combined with porous stones. With this method, the plants grow much faster because of the high amount of oxygen that the roots receive.

Hasil gambar untuk aeroponic
Top-fed deep water culture
Top-fed deep water culture is a technique involving delivering highly oxygenated nutrient solution direct to the root zone of plants. While deep water culture involves the plant roots hanging down into a reservoir of nutrient solution, in top-fed deep water culture the solution is pumped from the reservoir up to the roots (top feeding). The water is released over the plant's roots and then runs back into the reservoir below in a constantly recirculating system. As with deep water culture, there is an airstone in the reservoir that pumps air into the water via a hose from outside the reservoir. The airstone helps add oxygen to the water. Both the airstone and the water pump run 24 hours a day.

The biggest advantage of top-fed deep water culture over standard deep water culture is increased growth during the first few weeks. With deep water culture, there is a time when the roots have not reached the water yet. With top-fed deep water culture, the roots get easy access to water from the beginning and will grow to the reservoir below much more quickly than with a deep water culture system. Once the roots have reached the reservoir below, there is not a huge advantage with top-fed deep water culture over standard deep water culture. However, due to the quicker growth in the beginning, grow time can be reduced by a few weeks.

History of Hydroponics


Hasil gambar untuk hydroponic
History
The earliest published work on growing terrestrial plants without soil was the 1627 book Sylva Sylvarum by Francis Bacon, printed a year after his death. Water culture became a popular research technique after that. In 1699, John Woodward published his water culture experiments with spearmint. He found that plants in less-pure water sources grew better than plants in distilled water. By 1842, a list of nine elements believed to be essential for plant growth had been compiled, and the discoveries of the German botanists Julius von Sachs and Wilhelm Knop, in the years 1859-65, resulted in a development of the technique of soilless cultivation. Growth of terrestrial plants without soil in mineral nutrient solutions was called solution culture. It quickly became a standard research and teaching technique and is still widely used today. Solution culture is now considered a type of hydroponics where there is no inert medium.

In 1929, William Frederick Gericke of the University of California at Berkeley began publicly promoting that solution culture be used for agricultural crop production. He first termed it aquaculture but later found that aquaculture was already applied to culture of aquatic organisms. Gericke created a sensation by growing tomato vines twenty-five feet high in his back yard in mineral nutrient solutions rather than soil. He introduced the term hydroponics, water culture, in 1937, proposed to him by W. A. Setchell, a phycologist with an extensive education in the classics. Hydroponics is derived from neologism constructed in analogy to  geoponica, that which concerns agriculture, replacing, earth, with water.

Reports of Gericke's work and his claims that hydroponics would revolutionize plant agriculture prompted a huge number of requests for further information. Gericke had been denied use of the University's greenhouses for his experiments due to the administration's skepticism, and when the University tried to compel him to release his preliminary nutrient recipes developed at home he requested greenhouse space and time to improve them using appropriate research facilities. While he was eventually provided greenhouse space, the University assigned Hoagland and Arnon to re-develop Gericke's formula and show it held no benefit over soil grown plant yields, a view held by Hoagland. In 1940, he published the book, Complete Guide to Soil less Gardening, after leaving his academic position in a climate that was politically unfavorable.

Two other plant nutritionists at the University of California were asked to research Gericke's claims. Dennis R. Hoagland and Daniel I. Arnon wrote a classic 1938 agricultural bulletin, The Water Culture Method for Growing Plants Without Soil,. Hoagland and Arnon claimed that hydroponic crop yields were no better than crop yields with good-quality soils. Crop yields were ultimately limited by factors other than mineral nutrients, especially light. This research, however, overlooked the fact that hydroponics has other advantages including the fact that the roots of the plant have constant access to oxygen and that the plants have access to as much or as little water as they need. This is important as one of the most common errors when growing is over- and under- watering; and hydroponics prevents this from occurring as large amounts of water can be made available to the plant and any water not used, drained away, recirculated, or actively aerated, eliminating anoxic conditions, which drown root systems in soil. In soil, a grower needs to be very experienced to know exactly how much water to feed the plant. Too much and the plant will not be able to access oxygen; too little and the plant will lose the ability to transport nutrients, which are typically moved into the roots while in solution. These two researchers developed several formulas for mineral nutrient solutions, known as Hoagland solution. Modified Hoagland solutions are still used today.

One of the earliest successes of hydroponics occurred on Wake Island, a rocky atoll in the Pacific Ocean used as a refuelling stop for Pan American Airlines. Hydroponics was used there in the 1930s to grow vegetables for the passengers. Hydroponics was a necessity on Wake Island because there was no soil, and it was prohibitively expensive to airlift in fresh vegetables.

In the 1960s, Allen Cooper of England developed the Nutrient film technique. The Land Pavilion at Walt Disney World's EPCOT Center opened in 1982 and prominently features a variety of hydroponic techniques. In recent decades, NASA has done extensive hydroponic research for their Controlled Ecological Life Support System or CELSS. Hydroponics intended to take place on Mars are using LED lighting to grow in different color spectrum with much less heat.
Hasil gambar untuk hydroponic
Origin
Soilless culture
Gericke originally defined hydroponics as crop growth in mineral nutrient solutions. Hydroponics is a subset of soilless culture. Many types of soilless culture do not use the mineral nutrient solutions required for hydroponics.

Plants that are not traditionally grown in a climate would be possible to grow using a controlled environment system like hydroponics. NASA has also looked to utilize hydroponics in the space program. Ray Wheeler,a plant physiologist at Kennedy Space Center’s Space Life Science Lab, believes that hydroponics will create advances within space travel. He terms this as a bioregenerative life support system.

Techniques
The two main types of hydroponics are solution culture and medium culture. Solution culture does not use a solid medium for the roots, just the nutrient solution. The three main types of solution cultures are static solution culture, continuous-flow solution culture and aeroponics. The medium culture method has a solid medium for the roots and is named for the type of medium, e.g., sand culture, gravel culture, or rockwool culture.

There are two main variations for each medium, sub-irrigation and top irrigation. For all techniques, most hydroponic reservoirs are now built of plastic, but other materials have been used including concrete, glass, metal, vegetable solids, and wood. The containers should exclude light to prevent algae growth in the nutrient solution.
Hasil gambar untuk hydroponic
Static solution culture
In static solution culture, plants are grown in containers of nutrient solution, such as glass Mason jars (typically, in-home applications), plastic buckets, tubs, or tanks. The solution is usually gently aerated but may be un-aerated. If un-aerated, the solution level is kept low enough that enough roots are above the solution so they get adequate oxygen. A hole is cut in the lid of the reservoir for each plant. There can be one to many plants per reservoir. Reservoir size can be increased as plant size increases. A home made system can be constructed from plastic food containers or glass canning jars with aeration provided by an aquarium pump, aquarium airline tubing and aquarium valves. Clear containers are covered with aluminium foil, butcher paper, black plastic, or other material to exclude light, thus helping to eliminate the formation of algae. The nutrient solution is changed either on a schedule, such as once per week, or when the concentration drops below a certain level as determined with an electrical conductivity meter. Whenever the solution is depleted below a certain level, either water or fresh nutrient solution is added. A Mariotte's bottle, or a float valve, can be used to automatically maintain the solution level. In raft solution culture, plants are placed in a sheet of buoyant plastic that is floated on the surface of the nutrient solution. That way, the solution level never drops below the roots.

Continuous-flow solution culture
In continuous-flow solution culture, the nutrient solution constantly flows past the roots. It is much easier to automate than the static solution culture because sampling and adjustments to the temperature and nutrient concentrations can be made in a large storage tank that has potential to serve thousands of plants. A popular variation is the nutrient film technique or NFT, whereby a very shallow stream of water containing all the dissolved nutrients required for plant growth is recirculated past the bare roots of plants in a watertight thick root mat, which develops in the bottom of the channel and has an upper surface that, although moist, is in the air. Subsequent to this, an abundant supply of oxygen is provided to the roots of the plants. A properly designed NFT system is based on using the right channel slope, the right flow rate, and the right channel length. The main advantage of the NFT system over other forms of hydroponics is that the plant roots are exposed to adequate supplies of water, oxygen, and nutrients. In all other forms of production, there is a conflict between the supply of these requirements, since excessive or deficient amounts of one results in an imbalance of one or both of the others. NFT, because of its design, provides a system where all three requirements for healthy plant growth can be met at the same time, provided that the simple concept of NFT is always remembered and practised. The result of these advantages is that higher yields of high-quality produce are obtained over an extended period of cropping. A downside of NFT is that it has very little buffering against interruptions in the flow, e.g., power outages. But, overall, it is probably one of the more productive techniques.

The same design characteristics apply to all conventional NFT systems. While slopes along channels of 1:100 have been recommended, in practice it is difficult to build a base for channels that is sufficiently true to enable nutrient films to flow without ponding in locally depressed areas. As a consequence, it is recommended that slopes of 1:30 to 1:40 are used. This allows for minor irregularities in the surface, but, even with these slopes, ponding and water logging may occur. The slope may be provided by the floor, or benches or racks may hold the channels and provide the required slope. Both methods are used and depend on local requirements, often determined by the site and crop requirements.

As a general guide, flow rates for each gully should be 1 liter per minute. At planting, rates may be half this and the upper limit of 2 L/min appears about the maximum. Flow rates beyond these extremes are often associated with nutritional problems. Depressed growth rates of many crops have been observed when channels exceed 12 metres in length. On rapidly growing crops, tests have indicated that, while oxygen levels remain adequate, nitrogen may be depleted over the length of the gully. As a consequence, channel length should not exceed 10–15 metres. In situations where this is not possible, the reductions in growth can be eliminated by placing another nutrient feed halfway along the gully and halving the flow rates through each outlet.

Root

Hasil gambar untuk gambar akar pohon
Root
Type root
Generally, there are two types of roots, namely:
  1. Fibers Root. Root is generally found in plants monocots. Although sometimes, dicotyledonous plants also have (with notes, dicotyledonous plants are propagated by grafting or cuttings). The main function of root fibers is to strengthen the establishment of the plant.
  2. Tap root. These roots are generally found in dicotyledonous plants. Its main function is to store food as an example: carrots, potatoes and so on in the form of tubers.
  • Hanging roots. Hanging roots grow from the top of the stem and grow towards the ground. Therefore, the roots can be seen hanging in the air. This suspension serves roots absorb water vapor and gases from the air. However, when it reaches the ground, the roots into the soil and serves to absorb water and mineral salts. Plants that have roots hanging for instance a banyan.
  • Breath roots. Breathing roots growing out of the trunk bottom. The root of the majority appear on the soil surface and partly in the soil. This looks like a prop roots upright stems. Roots of breath has many gaps where the entry of air. So, as the name implies, serves breath roots to breathe. Plants that have roots of breath, such as mangroves and rushes.
  • Adhesive roots. The adhesive grow roots along the stem. The adhesive contained in the roots of plants that grow climbing. This root is used to attach the rod on the wall as well as other plants. Plants that have roots adhesive, for example betel.
Root function
Root function for the plant:

  • To support and strengthen the establishment of plants in the life
  • To absorb water and mineral salts (substances of nutrients) of the soil
  • Transports water and nutrients that have been absorbed into places on the body of plants that require saint
  • In some kinds of plants there that serves as a means of respiration, eg mangroves
  • In some species, there are useful as a place to store reserves of food or as a means of vegetative reproduction. For example, carrots have the enlarged taproot, serves as a place to store food. In the breadfruit plants, from the roots can grow buds that will grow into a new individual.
Modification of roots
  • Roots breath. Roots up on the ground, especially on the water, such as the mangrove genera (Avicennia, Soneratia).
  • Hanging roots. Roots entirely above ground. Hanging roots of epiphytic orchids found in plants.
  • Root buttresses. This root is found in many types of tropical plants.
  • Root suckers. These roots are the kinds of parasitic plants such as mistletoe.

Root pseudo
Organ or tissue that are anatomically can not be considered as roots but has a function similar to the root of the root called pseudo or Rhizoid (Ex. Rhizoid). The term is usually pinned on individuals who are not included vascular plant but can be attached to a particular object using a tool similar to the root function, namely to attach, anchor, or absorb nutrients from where he grew up. Gametophyte phase of algae and mosses and ferns have Rhizoid. Some herbs pterofit (Euphyllophyta) also has Rhizoid which is a modified leaf or stem. An example is the Azolla and Salvinia, and Lemna.

Water Plants


Water Plants
Hydrophyte
Aquatic plants also called hidrofit (Ing. Hydrophyte) are plants that have adapted to living in aquatic environments, both sets of part or all of his body. Water plants depend on life in water, not just the muddy ground and sometimes dry, though the term hidrofit used also for plants that can adapt to the wet conditions, but daily grow in soils with normal water content.

Aquatic plants usually pinned on vascular plant that live in water, such as the amount of water spikes (member nation Salviniales, Ceropteris thalictroides) or lots of seed plants (of various genera (genus), both monocots and dicots). Some mosses (such as Riccia and Ricciocarpus) also live floating in the water. Seaweed is not considered a plant of sea water because it is not true vascular.

Characteristic features
Here are the characteristics of the water plant :
  • Thin cuticle. Cuticles especially preventing water loss, so most hydrophytes no need for cuticles.
  • Stomata are open most of the time because of abundant water and therefore no need for it to be stored in the plant. This means that the stomatal guard cells are generally not active.
  • Increasing the number of stomata, which is on one side of the leaf.
  • Less rigid structure: the water pressure to support them.
  • Flat leaf on the surface of the plant for flotation.
  • Air sacs for flotation.
  • Small roots: water can be spread directly onto the leaves.
  • Lightweight roots: no need to support the plant.
  • Special roots can take in oxygen.

For example, some types of buttercup (Ranunculus genus) float slightly submerged in water; simply extend the flowers on the water. The leaves and roots are long and thin and almost hair-like; This helps spread the mass of plants over a wide area, making it lighter. Root length and thin leaves also provide a greater surface area for uptake of mineral solutes and oxygen. The average width of the leaves of water lilies (family Nymphaeaceae) helps distribute the weight over a large area, thus helping them float near the surface. Many fish which maintain aquatic plants in the tank to control phytoplankton and moss by removing metabolites. Many types of aquatic plants are invasive species in various parts of the world. Water makes particularly good crop of mourning because they doubled vegetatively from fragments.

Hasil gambar untuk tanaman lotus
Lotus (Nelumbo nucifera)
This type of plant requires water and soil media, usually placed in a clay pot is high. Lotus flowers are very large, there are white and red. Green lotus leaves and large, but there are also small. Lotus stem stalk can reach one meter more. Lotus flowers will appear and bloom in conjunction with a religious holiday, when it started to grow and blossom always coincide with the celebration of a good Catholic religion, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism

Hasil gambar untuk Pistia stratiotes

Kapu-kapu (Pistia stratiotes)
Plants of this type require soil and water media, if most of the water and exposed to direct sunlight, the leaves will quickly hancur.Biasanya this plant is used to place ornamental fish spawn, because it has long roots that hang down water.
Hasil gambar untuk melati air

Jasmine water (Echinodorus paleafolius)
White flowers grow on long stems lined up in a number of several florets. After blooming alternately in the morning, water jasmine flowers will furl. Usually from the former flowers growing shoots of plants. Water jasmine leaves somewhat stiff, the surface and the bottom covered with coarse hairs.

At these plants, there are three kinds of leaves that were found are large round, oval big and small oval stained. Each has a similar interest, but with different plant sizes. This type of plant is not resistant to sunlight throughout the day. If the leaves become yellowish, should move to a less protected.

Hasil gambar untuk Pontederia cordata

Pandan water (Pontederia cordata)
Also called pickerel rush, these plants bloom throughout the year and reached a high of approximately 1 meter more. stalk sustain long leaf heart resemble but extends 25 cm. Each stalk plants have at least 2-4 leaves. The flowers are very beautiful. Purplish blue color is small clustered in bunches on the towering stalk.

Pondeteria need sunshine from early morning until noon. Note the plant environment. When to overly moist, stems and leaves can be immediately overrun by fleas.

TYPES OF WATER PLANTS
1. Plants In Water
Water plants are plant species ranging from root until the end of the stem and leaves are submerged in the water. Water plants are widely used in the Aquascape / aquarium fresh water or fresh water aquarium.
As an example of the type - the type of aquatic plants to plant in water, which are:
  • Hygrophila polysperma
  • Bacopa sp
  • Rotala machandra
  • Ludwigia sp
  • Cryptocorine
  • Anubias
  • Wallisneria spiralis
  • Water algae
2. Plant Floats
Is a species of aquatic plants that float on the water surface that moves slowly and that the surface of the water is calm. Usually this type - the type of floating aquatic plants is growing very fast so that it can cover the surface of the water
As an example of the type - the type of aquatic plants for floating plants, which are:
  • Water hyacinth
  • Watercress
  • Lotus
  • Papyrus / Cyperus papyrus
  • Cyperus / Cyperus alternifolius
  • Typha / Typha angustifollia
  • Jasmine water / Echinodorus palaefolius
  • Thalia geniculate
  • Pontederia
  • Sagitaria
  • Water poppy
  • Giant arum
  • Water weeds
3. Crop Edges
Is a kind of - kind of aquatic plants that grow on the banks of the water basin. This type of water plant is a complement of the pool so usually for pools - very formal, there are not many choices of types of aquatic plants to plant this edge.
As an example of the type - the type of aquatic plants to plant ledges, which are:
  • Iris domestica
  • Choenoplectus lacustris
  • Darmera pellata